Capitalism, as The China Hustle supposes, isn’t just a way for hardworking people to get ahead, it’s the perfect system to con, cheat, and fraud your way to the top. The hustle in question: reverse mergers that allowed roughly 400 … Continue reading →

The Noir City Film Festival lands in the Mile High City today and hangs around until Sunday. Noir City Denver features six films (five on 35mm), and introductions from the Film Noir Foundation‘s Eddie Mueller and novelist James Ellroy. It’s … Continue reading →

This week at CU-Boulder’s International Film Series, programmer extraordinaire, Pablo Kjolseth, has Terrence Malick’s first five films — Badlands, Days of Heaven, The Thin Red Line, The New World, and The Tree of Life — on 35mm with special introductions. Yours truly will be introducing Badlands … Continue reading →

When Vertigo was released in 1958, Alfred Hitchcock wasn’t just a household name, he was a franchise. Between his TV show, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and a new film every year, audiences were never far from the Master of Suspense. Under those circumstances, … Continue reading →

For those of you who just can’t stand to leave the dog at home, but simply must knock back a few, Romero’s K9 Club & Tap House in Lafayette has brought the chaos of a dog park and the ambiance … Continue reading →

The Brakhage Center Symposium returns this Saturday and Sunday for a fourteenth go-round at CU-Boulder. The full line-up includes works by Karen Yasinsky, Christopher Harris, and Jean-Paul Kelly; a program of Brazilian documentary and experimental film curated by Chris Stults; and Celebrating … Continue reading →